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Commodore 64 games

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Q867164
Canabalt is a one-button endless runner designed by Adam Saltsman for the Experimental Gameplay Project in 2009. The 2D side-scrolling video game was originally written as a Flash game, then ported to iOS, Android, PlayStation Portable, Ouya, and HTML5. An authorized version for the Commodore 64 called C64anabalt was released on cartridge. Canabalt has been credited with popularizing the endless runner subgenre.
Crystal Castles
1983 video game
Target: Renegade
1988 video game
WWF WrestleMania
1991 video game
Out Run Europa
1991 video game
Championship Lode Runner
1985 video game
Head over Heels
1987 arcade adventure video game
Rocket Ranger
1988 video game
Wings of Fury
1987 video game
The Activision Decathlon
1983 sports video game
Gauntlet II
1986 arcade video game
10th Frame
1986 video game
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
1984 interactive fiction video game
Ninja Spirit
1988 video game
U.N. Squadron
1989 shoot 'em up video game
Montezuma's Revenge
1984 video game
Beach Head
1985 video game
Sargon
video game series
Deflektor
Deflektor is a puzzle video game developed by Vortex Software and published by Gremlin Graphics in December 1987. The game was ported to the X68000 by Bullet-Proof Software and the Atari 8-bit computers developed by Atari Corporation in 1988, but was not published. According to Deflektor X4 remake programmer Ignacio Pérez Gil, Deflektor developer Costa Panayi endorsed the creation and distribution of the non-commercial open-source freeware in the 2000s.
Q2269628
1991 video game
Narc
1988 video game
Cyberball
is a 1988 sports video game developed and published by Atari Games for arcades. Set in the year 2022, the game is a 7-man variation of American football using robotic avatars of different speeds, sizes, and skill sets. Cyberball was ported to several home consoles and computers, including the Sega Genesis, Atari Lynx, and Nintendo Entertainment System.
The Sentinel
1986 video game
Paradroid
Paradroid is a Commodore 64 video game written by Andrew Braybrook and published by Hewson Consultants in 1985. It is a shoot 'em up with puzzle elements and was critically praised at release. The objective is to clear a fleet of spaceships of hostile robots by destroying them or taking over them via a minigame. It was remade as Paradroid 90 for the Commodore Amiga and Atari ST home computers and as Paradroid 2000 for the Acorn Archimedes. There exist several fan-made remakes for modern PCs. In 2004, the Commodore 64 version was re-released as a built-in game on the C64 Direct-to-TV, in 2008 f
Deadline
1982 interactive fiction computer game
list of Commodore 64 games
Wikimedia list article
Summer Games
1984 video game
Impossible Mission
1984 video game
Exolon
Exolon is a run and gun game programmed by Raffaele Cecco and published by Hewson in 1987 for the ZX Spectrum, Commodore 64, and Amstrad CPC. It was later converted to the Enterprise 128, Amiga, and Atari ST.
Barbarian
1987 video game
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: The Action Game
1989 video game
Oil's Well
1983 video game
Chuck Rock
1991 computer and video game
Alien 3
video game 1992
Cyber Police ESWAT
1989 video game
Supremacy: Your Will Be Done
1990 video game
Terra Cresta
1985 video game
Q1422227
1984 video game
John Madden Football
1988 video game
One on One
1983 video game
Space Taxi
1984 video game
APB
1987 video game
Back to the Future Part III
1991 video game
Stunt Car Racer
1989 video game
Buggy Boy
1985 driving style arcade game
Ugh!
1992 video game
Moon Cresta
1980 video game
Night Driver
1976 arcade video game by Ted Michon
First Samurai
1991 computer and video game
RoadBlasters
RoadBlasters is a 1987 vehicular combat video game developed and published by Atari Games for arcades. The player navigates an armed sports car through 50 different rally races, getting to the finish line before running out of fuel. Ports were released for a variety of home systems by Tengen and U.S. Gold.
X-Men: Madness in Murderworld
1989 video game
Livingstone I Presume
1986 video game
Uridium
Uridium (released for the NES as The Last Starfighter) is a horizontally scrolling shooter designed by Andrew Braybrook for the Commodore 64 and published by Hewson Consultants in 1986. The game consists of fifteen levels, each named after a metal element, with the last level being the fictional metallic element Uridium. The manual quotes Robert Orchard, who invented the name, as saying "I really thought it existed".
Juno First
1983 video game
Wizardry V: Heart of the Maelstrom
1988 video game
Skate or Die!
1987 video game
Ace of Aces
video game (World War II flight simulator), released in 1986
Tintin on the Moon
1987 video game
RoboCop 2
1990 video game
The Transformers
1986 video game